Essay Topic Hub

Genocide
Essays

575+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

575 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Genocide—the deliberate destruction of a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group—is one of the most serious subjects examined across history, political science, law, and criminal justice courses. Its academic weight comes from the intersection of moral philosophy, international law, and historical evidence, forcing students to define where mass violence ends and systematic extermination begins. Cases such as the Holocaust, the Rwandan genocide, and events in Sudan appear repeatedly in coursework because they test legal definitions, state responsibility, and the limits of international response. Debates about whether specific historical episodes—such as violence against Native Americans or the European witch hunts of 1450–1750—legally or morally qualify as genocide make the topic analytically demanding rather than merely descriptive.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays weigh the Holocaust against other state-sponsored persecutions to identify shared patterns and key differences. Case-study analyses focus on specific events, including Nanking in 1937 or ethnic cleansing in Sudan, grounding arguments in particular historical contexts. Policy-oriented papers assess institutional responses, such as whether the United Nations could have prevented specific genocides or whether the United States should enter the ICC Treaty. Some essays are explicitly argumentative, tasked with proving or disproving whether a historical episode meets the threshold of genocide.

A strong essay on genocide begins with a precise, workable definition and applies it consistently throughout. Evidence drawn from documented state policies, victim group identification, and casualty records carries the most weight. Comparative arguments should isolate specific variables rather than listing atrocities side by side without analysis. The most common pitfall is conflating genocide with other forms of mass violence—ethnic cleansing, war crimes, or persecution—without explaining where and why the legal and moral distinctions matter.

575 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
How Did English Settlement Affect the Land of North America?
¶ … British agricultural revolution and English settlement patterns in their colonies in New England. It is the authors contention that the world view of the English influenced their agricultural practices and the way…
Paper Doctorate
Problem of Evil Is Evil
Throughout history, the persistence of evil has posed problems for conventional theistic belief systems. Crime, pain, disease, and other "evils" continue to make the world what Hume called "a diversity of distress and…
Paper Doctorate
Justice and Human Rights Part
Part 1, Topic 2: Eleanor Roosevelt and the UDHR
Paper Undergraduate
Human Genome Project May Be
Human Genome Project may be the most controversial research project in modern medical or scientific history.
Paper Undergraduate
Strategy Icty and Ictr Introduction
Introduction combination of political and criminal activities in the international arena, and the inability or unwillingness of local governments to handle these at the time has inspired the creation of entities such as…
Paper Doctorate
Aid Strategies or Trade Agreements More Likely
¶ … Aid strategies or Trade Agreements more likely to relieve poverty in Sun-Saharan Africa?
Paper Doctorate
Global Socioeconomic Perspectives International Organizations
International organizations whether the UN, NATO, World Bank, WTO, IMF and others are no more than the playgrounds of major powers who use these multilateral institutions to advance their own interests often at the…
Paper Doctorate
How Native Americans treated historians: an examination of primary sources
Eurocentrism and the History of Amerindians
Thesis Doctorate
Exploitation of Native American Garbs in Fashion
This paper discusses the use of native American designs (or pseudo native American designs) in clothing. There are a number of controversies with respect to using these designs and that subject is covered.
Essay Doctorate
Rwandan Genocide a Philosophical Theory (Jean-Jacques Rousseau\'s
Rousseau's theodicy provides a very engaging lens with which to view the tragedy of the Rwandan genocide that took place in 1994. The notions of self-love that the author believes are at the root of human behavior can actually provide curative solutions to this dilemma. Doing so requires temperance, substantial educational reform, and greater levels of national solidarity.